complaining – Techdirt (original) (raw)

Stories filed under: "complaining"

American-Statesman: Suspect Position, Bad Example, Another Bad Example, Debunked Statistics, Contradiction

from the so-much-silly dept

Most of the time the articles we take issue with at Techdirt have something in them we disagree with or find silly. And by some_thing_, I mean to indicate that there’s a singular wrong in there that we point out. Or, at most, a couple of wrongs. But sometimes you encounter a piece written for a supposedly reputable publication that seems so much as though it was written to be completely wrong, that I start to wonder if LulzSec has begun infiltrating the mainstream press. Take this American-Statesman article by Gary Dinges piece by piece for an example of what I’m talking about:

"Months and months of hard work available for illegal downloading free of charge in a matter of minutes. That’s the difficulty facing authors, filmmakers and musicians across the nation, costing them untold sums of money each year."

Well, gee, Gary, that sounds positively terrifying. It must be hard on these creators who are clearly in horrific dire straits. Care to share an example?

"It has become rampant," said Sandra Brown, a Dallas-area author with 60 New York Times bestsellers. "I have an assistant — a real Internet guru — who spends the bulk of her time monitoring the Web."

Ah, got it….wait, what?!!? I just want to make sure I understand this completely. You’re offering up a well-known author who is routinely on the best sellers list? In order to demonstrate the struggle of authors with regards to internet piracy? Maybe next you’d like to do a piece on the political glass ceiling of minorities in America and use Barack Obama as your prime example?

And here’s another question: How bad has internet piracy made things for you when you have the resources to pay an assistant, a real internet guru no less, (whatever her salary is) to spend the majority of her time "monitoring the Web"? And what the hell does that even mean? And why are you doing it? I for one totally envy that internet "guru" getting a fat check to play Bejewelled all week then turn in a report saying "yup, the internet still exists".

Okay…vitriol aside, how can this possibly make sense economically? If we were able to get some concrete answer as to which ended up costing Sandra more (real, not potential) money overall, the evil and vengeful internet or the salary of her faithful assistant for "monitoring" it, which do you think it’d be?

But back to Dinges’ article. He then offers us Dano Johnson, an animator who we learn has had his own battles with internet piracy. Apparently he animated a movie that ended up on YouTube and was viewed five thousand times or so before a DMCA takedown was issued. Dano’s response?

"’I feel like I got robbed 5,000 times,’ he said."

Well golly gee willickers, friend, sometimes I feel like a character from a Mel Brooks spoof movie, but feelings don’t really mean a whole lot here, do they? The fact of the matter is that you weren’t robbed five thousand times. I wonder how many of those folks who viewed the YouTube video would have done so if it weren’t there to see for free to begin with? I wonder how many of them came across it for the first time when someone shared a link? I wonder if YouTube felt "robbed" for five thousand instances of promoting you at no cost? Did you pay YouTube for any of that? Book yourself, Dano (sorry, couldn’t resist).

Now, after the article then goes on to quote all the billions and trillions of sweet American dollars that are being directly removed from the economy, ostensibly never to be seen again, we get back to the best line of the piece with one final quote from Dano Johnson on what effect piracy has had on his willingness to create his art:

"Piracy isn’t going to make me want to stop making films."

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p align=”left”>Oh, sweet internet Gods, thank you for this. Piracy, while perhaps annoying, doesn’t stop creation. And if you acknowledge that copyright is supposed to be an incentive to create, we arrive at the inevitable conclusion that nuclear options like ProtectIP, which is what this article was actually all about even though they didn’t name the increasingly controversial bill by name, are not the answer.

Filed Under: complaining, copyright, piracy

Mobile Phones Suck… But Isn't It Amazing That They Exist?

from the everything's-amazing-and-nobody's-happy dept

By now, hopefully, you’ve seen that clip of comedian Louis CK on Conan O’Brien’s show (the old, old one) which went kinda viral, where Louis talks about how “everything is amazing and no one is happy”:

It’s hilarious and oh-so-true. I’m reminded of it because of David Boaz’s post over at the Cato @ Liberty blog, where he talks about how amazing it is to think how far phone communication has come in the past three decades:

When I was a kid in the 1960s and we came back from a visit to my grandmother’s, my mother used to call my grandmother, let the phone ring twice, and then hang up. It was important for my grandmother to know that we’d arrived home safely, but long-distance telephone calls were too expensive to indulge in unnecessarily. When I entered Vanderbilt University in 1971, my parents had to decide whether to pay for a telephone in my dorm room. They decided to do so, but most of the thoroughly upper-middle-class students on my floor did not have phones. Phones cost real money back then. Then came the breakup of the AT&T monopoly in 1984. Phone technology and competitive service provision exploded. In 1982, Motorola produced the first portable mobile phone. It weighed about 2 pounds and cost $3995. Within a very few years they were much smaller, much cheaper, and selling like hotcakes.

Today there are some 4.6 billion mobile phones in the world, and counting, or about 67 per every 100 people in the world. The newer ones allow you to carry in your hand more computing power than the computers that put Apollo 11 on the moon. You can cruise the internet, find your location with GPS, read books, send texts, pay bills, process credit cards, watch video, record video, stream video to the web, take and send photos — oh, and make phone calls from just about anywhere. Unimaginable just a few years ago.

But the point of the post is to question why some are now putting together an event about “Why Your Cell Phone is So Terrible,” pointing out that it’s a bit silly to complain when you compare it to what we had.

It’s a really good point — but I have to admit I can see both sides to this argument. It’s the very fact that, even when we do amazing things, we can still see the faults with it and that drives us to keep improving and to keep innovating. It’s the very “culture of improvement” that drives growth and innovation. So, while I can agree that it’s sometimes a shame how much we feel a sense of entitlement towards making things better when those amazing things didn’t even exist just a few years ago, it’s hard not to sympathize with the feeling of wanting things to be even better.

And, by the way, I’m not alone in seeing both sides of all this. That Louis CK video at the top? The one where he mocks the guy sitting next to him on an airplane for getting upset that the WiFi in the sky suddenly stopped working? Yeah, he later admitted that it wasn’t someone sitting next to him, but himself getting pissed off at the WiFi not working, even though he didn’t even know in-flight WiFi existed until he got on the airplane. So yes, everything is amazing, and no one’s happy… but maybe that’s a good thing.

Filed Under: cell phones, complaining, louis ck, mobile

Prison Guards Suing For The Right To Bitch About Their Bosses In Private Online Forums

from the unfair-discipline dept

A group of five prison guards in Australia wanted to bitch about their boss… and did so in a private group on Facebook. Yet, somehow, their superiors found out about it and accused them of misconduct and threatened to have the guards fired. In response, the guards are suing, and saying they should have a right to speak their mind on a private message board like that. As a union official notes:_“It’s more like people getting together in a pub and having a beer and bagging the boss because the boss wants to privatize their jobs.”_Indeed. Though, it seems like these sorts of things are becoming more common. As the entire work/life dividing line continues to blur, expect many more such situations, where things that were previously considered safely on the “life” side of the line, suddenly find themselves thrust into the “work” side.

Filed Under: australia, bosses, complaining